Thank you for your help.

The more I learn about this the more I think the Silver puppy is the way to go 
for consistent batches. I'll have to see if my wife will get me one for 
Christmas. :)

Jeff





________________________________
From: Ode Coyote <odecoy...@windstream.net>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Wed, November 4, 2009 9:21:01 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Getting Started



  Conductivity [uS] is conductivity, so 442, NaCl and KCl is irrelevant.
The uS conductivity number closely corresponds to the PPM number ..after the 
conductivity stops dropping...up to around 30 uS....as derived by $$ Atomic 
Absorption Spectrophotometer tests $$ done on samples averaging 12 PPM @ 87% 
ionic as the middle of a range.
Little or no Tyndall Effect, [as seen in a laser beam] fudge the number down 
some...heavy dense TE fudge it up some, to compensate for the unreadable 
particulates.

Beyond 30 uS water solubility limits create conditions where conductivity 
measuring is **pretty** much useless but can still offer some hints when taken 
before it drops.

Using constant current means a linear ion emission rate, so plotting 
conductivity rise over time at a given current, you can extend that line past 
30 uS where it starts going non linear with unreadable particle formation and 
predict PPM as uS that can't be read.
But a second uS drop back chart would make that a lot more accurate and that's 
probably not linear and would take many time stabilized batches to compile.

Some say that Faraday Equations correspond with conductivity measurements, but 
Faraday doesn't account for waste products...ie  "where" the silver is.
Obviously, not all of it stays in the water. [Yet another chart to average in? ]

BUT

In the REAL world where application is pure common sense intuition and no 
dosing recommendations make any sense at all because every person and every 
application is unique, "ballpark" is good enough.
It's nearly impossible to over do and the major difference is just water.
A particle too big to get out, never gets in and the sizes range all over the 
place in any given batch.  Your body has a great and intelligent filtration 
system if IT is working properly...and if it isn't, you'll likely be having 
some other much more serious problems than turning blue.

A Claymore mine and a sniper rifle do the same job when the scenery doesn't 
care.

Do what works and if it doesn't, do it different till it does..and if it STILL 
doesn't, do something else as well. [Like, toss in some DMSO and eat a lot of 
carrots]

When you forget that you need to, you are done. [Until something reminds you, 
if it does ]

Ode



At 06:17 PM 11/3/2009 -0800, you wrote:
> Just unpacked my brand spanking new COM-100. Many cool features that I know 
> nothing about. It's neat that the instructions actually mention CS.
> 
> Can someone give me the short lesson?
> 
> I'm thinking I want the mode at µS and 442. This is different than the ppm 
> that is talked about. Is there any conversions I have to do for say a 10 ppm 
> solution? Please help me understand.
> 
> Thank you,
> Jeff
> 
> 
> 
> From: Ode Coyote <odecoy...@windstream.net>
> To: silver-list@eskimo.com
> Sent: Wed, October 21, 2009 4:48:39 AM
> Subject: Re: CS>Getting Started
> 
> 
> 
>   HM Digital makes a decent PPM meter [TDS3] ..but a PPM meter isn't what
> you want...they are designed to meter "salt water" and silver water isn't
> salt water.
> Looks like this one is on the low end of their line.
>   A PPM meter is useful for CS ...but not very.
> 
>   Try an HM Digital EC3
> <http://cgi.ebay.com/HM-Digital-EC-3-Temp-Water-Conductivity-Tester-Meter_W0QQitemZ220494392013QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item33567d6acd>http://cgi.ebay.com/HM-Digital-EC-3-Temp-Water-Conductivity-Tester-Meter_W0QQitemZ220494392013QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item33567d6acd
> 
> or COM-100
> 
> Ode
> 
> 


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